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Coordinates: 51°21′22″N 7°28′23″E / 51.35611°N 7.47306°E / 51.35611; 7.47306
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{{Short description|Art museum in Germany}}
'''The Karl Ernst Osthaus-Museum''' is an [[art museum]] in [[Hagen]], Germany. The center of the museum is a building whose interior was designed by [[Henry van de Velde]] to house [[Karl Ernst Osthaus]]'s art collection, open to the public as the [[Folkwang Museum]]. When Osthaus's heirs sold his art collection to the city of Essen, the city of Hagen gained possession of the empty museum building. For a time it served as offices for the local electric company. After World War II, the new director of Hagen's city art museum, Herta Hesse, oversaw the restoration of the old Folkwang building into a new home for Hagen's art museum. Although the original interior design was lost due to reconstruction and World War II bombings, the interior has been restored several times and gives a reasonable approximation of Osthaus's original museum, if not its collection. Under her direction, the museum focused on recapturing what the city had lost when the Folkwang collection was sold to Essen. The museum became a focus for exhibits of art nouveau and expressionist art, particularly the artists associated with Osthaus or his art colony.
{{more citations needed|date=October 2021}}
Under [[Michael Fehr]], the Karl Ernst Osthaus-Museum adopted a more playful attitude toward local history. Large installations created sensations in the city, and numerous works poke fun at Hagen's inability to transcend the Osthaus past.
[[File:Hagen Brunnenhalle-im-Osthaus-Museum.jpg|thumb|Entrance hall of the villa]]
{{Location map|North Rhine-Westphalia
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|caption = Osthaus-Museum Hagen, North Rhine-Westphalia
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The Karl Ernst '''Osthaus-Museum''' is an [[art museum]] in [[Hagen]], [[North Rhine-Westphalia]], Germany. The center of the museum is a building whose interior was designed by [[Henry van de Velde]] to house [[Karl Ernst Osthaus]]' art collection, open to the public as the [[Museum Folkwang]]. When Osthaus' heirs sold his art collection to the city of Essen, the city of Hagen gained possession of the empty museum building. For a time it served as offices for the local electric company.


After World War II, the new director of Hagen's city art museum, Herta Hesse, oversaw the restoration of the old Folkwang building into a new home for Hagen's art museum. Although the original interior design was lost due to reconstruction and World War II bombings, the interior has been restored several times and gives a reasonable approximation of Osthaus' original museum, if not its collection. Under her direction, the museum focused on recapturing what the city had lost when the Folkwang collection was sold to Essen. The museum became a focus for exhibits of [[Art Nouveau]] and [[expressionism|expressionist]] art, particularly the artists associated with Osthaus or his art colony.<ref name="Schulte">{{Cite journal |last=Schulte |first=B. |date=2009-11-01 |title=Karl Ernst Osthaus, Folkwang and the 'Hagener Impuls': Transcending the walls of the museum |url=https://academic.oup.com/jhc/article-lookup/doi/10.1093/jhc/1fhp028 |journal=Journal of the History of Collections |language=en |volume=21 |issue=2 |pages=213–220 |doi=10.1093/jhc/fhp028 |issn=0954-6650}}</ref>
The painting collection stems from private donations and gradual purchases. It houses one of the main collections of paintings by [[Christian Rohlfs]] and the most important collection of paintings by [[Emil Schumacher]]. Both are considered Hagen artists. Other notable works on exhibit include environmental art by Herman de Vries, and the German branch of the Museum of Jurassic Technology.


Under [[Michael Fehr]], the Karl Ernst Osthaus-Museum adopted a more playful attitude toward local history. Large installations created sensations in the city, and numerous works poke fun at Hagen's inability to transcend the Osthaus past.
The Karl Ernst Osthaus-Museum also houses the Karl Ernst Osthaus-Archive, a major depository of documents relating to the [[Folkwang Museum]] and early 20th century avant garde art and architecture.

{{Uncategorized|January 2007}}
The painting collection stems from private donations and gradual purchases. It houses one of the main collections of paintings by [[Christian Rohlfs]] and the most important collection of paintings by [[Emil Schumacher]]. Both are considered Hagen artists. Other notable works on exhibit include environmental art by Herman de Vries, and the German branch of the [[Museum of Jurassic Technology]].

The Karl Ernst Osthaus-Museum also houses the Karl Ernst Osthaus-Archive, a major depository of documents relating to the Folkwang Museum and early 20th century avant garde art and architecture.

==References ==
{{Reflist}}

==External links==
{{commons category|Karl-Ernst-Osthaus-Museum}}
*[http://www.osthausmuseum.de/ www.osthausmuseum.de]

{{coord|51|21|22|N|7|28|23|E|display=title|region:DE-NW_type:landmark_source:dewiki}}

{{Authority control}}

[[Category:Museums in North Rhine-Westphalia]]
[[Category:Art museums and galleries in Germany]]
[[Category:Hagen]]
[[Category:Art museums and galleries established in 1902]]
[[Category:Art Nouveau architecture in Germany]]
[[Category:1902 establishments in Germany]]
[[Category:Art Nouveau museum buildings]]
[[Category:Art Nouveau collections]]
[[Category:Henry van de Velde buildings]]

Latest revision as of 22:18, 25 January 2024

Entrance hall of the villa
Osthaus-Museum Hagen
Osthaus-Museum Hagen
Osthaus-Museum Hagen
Osthaus-Museum Hagen, North Rhine-Westphalia

The Karl Ernst Osthaus-Museum is an art museum in Hagen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. The center of the museum is a building whose interior was designed by Henry van de Velde to house Karl Ernst Osthaus' art collection, open to the public as the Museum Folkwang. When Osthaus' heirs sold his art collection to the city of Essen, the city of Hagen gained possession of the empty museum building. For a time it served as offices for the local electric company.

After World War II, the new director of Hagen's city art museum, Herta Hesse, oversaw the restoration of the old Folkwang building into a new home for Hagen's art museum. Although the original interior design was lost due to reconstruction and World War II bombings, the interior has been restored several times and gives a reasonable approximation of Osthaus' original museum, if not its collection. Under her direction, the museum focused on recapturing what the city had lost when the Folkwang collection was sold to Essen. The museum became a focus for exhibits of Art Nouveau and expressionist art, particularly the artists associated with Osthaus or his art colony.[1]

Under Michael Fehr, the Karl Ernst Osthaus-Museum adopted a more playful attitude toward local history. Large installations created sensations in the city, and numerous works poke fun at Hagen's inability to transcend the Osthaus past.

The painting collection stems from private donations and gradual purchases. It houses one of the main collections of paintings by Christian Rohlfs and the most important collection of paintings by Emil Schumacher. Both are considered Hagen artists. Other notable works on exhibit include environmental art by Herman de Vries, and the German branch of the Museum of Jurassic Technology.

The Karl Ernst Osthaus-Museum also houses the Karl Ernst Osthaus-Archive, a major depository of documents relating to the Folkwang Museum and early 20th century avant garde art and architecture.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Schulte, B. (2009-11-01). "Karl Ernst Osthaus, Folkwang and the 'Hagener Impuls': Transcending the walls of the museum". Journal of the History of Collections. 21 (2): 213–220. doi:10.1093/jhc/fhp028. ISSN 0954-6650.
[edit]

51°21′22″N 7°28′23″E / 51.35611°N 7.47306°E / 51.35611; 7.47306